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This is the blog for Robert Vincent, Chief of Police for the Gulfport (Florida) Police Department. Please feel free to leave comments, but keep in mind that anything appearing on this page may be subject to retention and disclosure in accordance with Florida public records law.

Please keep your posts clean and respectful. Comments are subject to review, and I do not permit lewdness, obscenity, or personal attacks.

Monday, August 5, 2013

Last month, a young Gulfport resident was beaten by three
older students on a school bus. News of this incident has been widely reported,
and since a version of a local report was carried nationally by CNN, I have
been overwhelmed with e-mails and phone calls from those who have been misled
to think that I and the Gulfport Police Department have spoken ill of the bus
driver.

Please allow me the opportunity to set the record straight.

I did a recorded interview with WFLA Tampa reporter, Yolanda
Fernandez. I agreed to do the interview because I had received several questions
from concerned people who had seen the video footage and wanted to know if we
were going to criminally charge the bus driver. Having seen the video myself, I
thought this was a reasonable concern and wanted to address it publicly.

When Ms. Fernandez’s story aired, I considered it an
accurate representation of our conversation. I had explained during the
interview that we would be referring the matter to the state attorney’s office
for evaluation of charges. I said that, while I understood the bus driver’s
decision not to get physically involved in the situation, the evidence
indicated that he did not take action where it seemed clear that he could have.
For example, the attack began after the bus was stopped, and the victim was
beaten almost continuously for 64 seconds before the driver said something to
the assailants. As soon as he did, they discontinued their attack. Imagine if
he’d said something sooner. When the criminals fled the bus out the emergency
exit, the victim lay out of sight underneath the seats. The driver, who had
previously acknowledged to dispatch that he thought the boy was going to be
killed, remained standing at the front of the bus.

When the state attorney’s office indicated it was not going
to charge the driver with a crime, another WFLA reporter, Peter Bernard, did a
follow up story. Unfortunately, what appeared on air included a heavily edited
version of my statement. It appeared as though I was personally criticizing the
bus-driver for not trying to step in and fight off the attackers. It was this
particular version of the story that was picked up and re-aired by CNN and
others without benefit of any follow up questions.

So I’m now left with the task of clarifying things on a very
large scale. Essentially, this is what I have to make clear: I would not expect
anybody who does not feel capable to physically intervene against three,
violent teens. I completely understand and accept this bus driver’s decision
not to do so.

Before I close, I think it is worth mentioning that the
Gulfport Police Department did not reveal the identity of the bus driver. Until
they became public record under Florida law, we did not release any documents
with the driver’s name. We also did not mention his name in any news interviews
or media releases, and his face was not visible in the video footage that we
released. I presume his identity was learned via the Pinellas school board, and
then it was revealed publicly by the television news.